Tuesday 29 May 2012

Doors opening, closing and revolving! Mind the doors!

One door closes,  another door ......... opens
Phewy!

One of the joys of this blog is the fact that occasionally as I push the "publish" button, the answers come into my mind, or at least the process of writing the blog unblocks my thinking.  As Martin said to me today, I probably ought to withdraw some entries as things change so quickly, he is right of course, but wrong as well. Reading the blog is you sharing in my thinking and entering into my confusion, doubt and general getting stuck in revolving doors!

"If it ain't broke don't fix it"

Well that is true, but what if you don't realise that it "ain't broke"?

Onam Festival Food of Kerala
Calcutta Chamber Orchestra
Having (I hope) sensitively let Jossefet go, and encouraged him to make the most of the fantastic opportunity he has in Brussels, I turned back to my original plan for this 10 year adventure!  I had decided to not go to India and wrote to my dear Indian "brothers" Simon and Sunny and apologised for the change of heart. Sunny wrote back fully understanding my situation but mentioned that his brother-in-law was getting married on August 27th and that the date was partially chosen because I would be in Kerala ...... I also realised just how much I enjoyed being in India and that it was 6 years since I was there. I looked at the finances and realised that I was pretty much on track and that I had no real excuse for not going (well not a financial one anyway!)

Panos Karan - Carnegie Hall
Also, I wrote to the Calcutta  School of Music to casually ask about my proposed residency with the Calcutta Chamber Orchestra ~ I am supposed to be there from September 3 to October 7 working with the orchestra and teaching in the Music School ~ most unusually (for India) I got a reply within 20 minutes telling me that my visit was awaited with eager anticipation and that a grand fundraising concert had been planned for October 6th and I would be conducting a Mozart Piano Concerto with an international soloist. The soloist is Panos Karan, of Greece but living in London ~ International Prize winner, Carnegie Hall Recitalist, St.John'sSmith Square, Academy of St Martins~ top flight!  Phewy!   Just the type of challenge I will relish, the challenge being getting the players up to scratch and to give a really stylistic performance.

Panos, soon to be following my baton!

So a quick rethink note to Simon and Sunny and I am on course for trip to India, including a wedding, the festival of Onam in Kerala, 2 x 3 day train journeys (Kerala to Calcutta), 5 weeks in the hustle bustle of Calcutta and some concerts!   Sunny has already found out my trains for me and is also looking a cheap air tickets .....
Th train starts bottom left Cochin and ends top right Kolkata (Calcutta) 3 days, 3000kms!

If you don't like crowds Calcutta is not for you!

Now I am on a roll ......

Then serendipitously I find a website that lists about 200 projects in Latin America requiring volunteers abouyt half of which that offer very low cost accommodation in return for volunteering!  I wrote about this in my last blog!  (It's old age, I repeat ,myself!)

But, but, BUT,

The Music Project - Trujillo!
On re-looking I find a lovely project, almost tailor made for me.

Teaching music in a music conservatoire in Trujillo, Peru.  This is a pukka conservatoire, with orchestrasm choirs, instrumental teaching and awards degrees etc.  No messing!  They also run a project to enable poor kids, to learn music and develop their talents and hopefully have a career, making a living in music.

Well, considering the Calcutta Chamber Orchestra is made up of 22 orphan boy/youths/young men who were all origianlly taught at the Oxford Mission Orphanage in Calcutta, I know what this type of training can do for good!

So immediately I have written two emails one directly to the Director of the Conservatoire, and the other to the organisation who arrange the placements. "Otra Cosa Network" is actually based in Warwick! and the directors have alovely house in the costal suburb of Huanchaco 20 minutes bus ride from central Trujillo, which is both a volunteer house and their office ~ just like CasaSito here in Antigua. 

Click here to read a story about these fantastic people   HERE

Now Trujillo is the colonial jewel in the crown of Peru, and Huanchaco was a fishing village and still maintains the most anceint forms of fishing, today it is a summer resort and surfers paradise (never mind)....
Trujillo

The beach at Huanchaco

So I am hoping  that the conservatoire like the idea of me teaching there and Otra Cosa approve my application, I will be accommodated in the VolunteerHouse with a twin bedded room with private bathroom (single occupancy for £4.30 per day!) ........ 

So if all goes to plan I will be back from India mid October and after a week in Uk would leave for Peru around October 22 for a six month stint .................... but what about the Andes Mountain Villages School?

Well, one of the tricks of all this, as I am finding out, is working your way around visa regulations. Whereas I can get a 183 day visa on entry to Peru (easy) it turns out that Ecuador is particualrly tricky you get a 90 day tourist visa free on entry but can only enter once in a year and the stay is a maximum pof 90 days. However,  the 90 day visa can be extended but it is a nightmare and applying for a special visa prior to entry for alonger period is a bigger nightmare and very expensive. 

Peru 183 days visa
So, my cunning plan is  183 days in Peru and then a jaunt up through Peru  along the Andes into Ecuador and along to Salasaca for about 3 months then a connecting flight from Quito to Trujillo and then back to the UK!   (But this is next July and subject to change!)

Huanchaco

I have crossed everything in the hope of getting to work in the Conservatoire!

Oh yes, and for the 2013/14 season ........  the Amazonian Jungles of Bolivia, the Amazonian Baroque Music Festival, and who knows maybe some more music and volunteering rolled into one.  I also wantto see if I can participate in the "Systema" Music system in Venuzuela! ....... So much to do, so little time!


But, but, BUT,

for now,  I am giving up my house and moving back to the Volunteer House on June 29th, saving a truck load of money and plan to use the time left to really, really push my Spanish as I will need to be pretty advanced for the work in Peru!  The volunteer house is actually very conducive to study and of course I get to practice my Spanish everyday with the staff!

Hasta Luego Amigos!

Saturday 26 May 2012

I think I lost my compass


I think I lost my compass and have been sleepwalking into heaven knows what!

Sorry but this is one of those navel gazing posts ~  yes, you get the good, the bad and the ugly!  Today I might need your advice!

 It’s insidious, the way you can slowly, develop “drift”, it is almost unnoticeable until one day you wake up and say “hey, how come I got here” especially if that is accompanied by a strong feeling that “here” is not where you feel you should be!  I never wanted a direct route from A to preferring to tack like a yacht  and believing that it is better to travel than to arrive.  I feel thatI have come to a stop here in Antigua.

When I set out last October on my great adventure, I had picked Guatemala as a safe place to start. 
Maybe too safe and maybe too secure.
What happened to knowmadicmike? Especially the nomad bit!
 Six-and-a-bit months later, I live in a nice house, I have a burgeoning relationship, I am comfortable and l feel lost! Well not exactly lost, but I left the UK to have an adventure, involving travel, giving something back”, pushing myself, enjoying myself and new experiences ….. and I feel that what I have got is the same old, same old except I am in a different country.  I listen to radio 4, Antigua is toitally geared to western tourists- Macdonalds, Burger King, Subway, DominoesPizza, Pops IceCream, delis full of expensive western products ................... all TOO comfortable!

Q:      Is this what I signed up for?
A:      I don’t think so!

If I were back in the UK I would have had long walks with Martin, or long discussions over dinner with you, talking through my doubts and fears.  Here, I have just myself to talk to and sometimes I end up going round in circles. And thatis not the same as a circular walk round the reservoir back in Brum!

How have I ended up renting a house that takes best part of 70% of my pension and consequently having to watch every quetzal I spend, and ifI am honest I think I fell into a relationship in order to …….. fill a void? ? fill time?  Have an interest?   None of which seems or feels like the right answer! (even though I had genuine feelings for him, and he for me)  But, too many pipe-dreams ...... better to call a halt before I do yet more damage to both him and me!

And why would I really want to set up and run an NGO involving stress, frustration and a whole heap of administration. I know that my entrepreneurial spirit runs away with me, but I also have to project forward and think about the fellow on my other shoulder who hates admin, hates routine and gets bored!  But getting the idea and working on it certainly got my entrepreneurial and creative juices flowing ……. And I like that!

The “knowmadic”  life was supposed to be just that, if I get bored, I move on, I stay for as long as I feel useful and then on to the next opportunity.  I have however learned that working with poor children has enormous rewards and I love it!

I return to the UK for a vacation in 3 months time and will have completed 10 months in Guatemala.  I hope that by August, I know what I shall be doing in September.

I am pretty much taken with Latin America and want to return to that, so I also have to reluctantly say no I to India. (I have a small 6 week project lined up in Kolkatta with the Chamber Orchestra and would be in India for about 2 months in total) the  trip is in the wrong direction and maybe it is a distraction?  Also it will cost about £1.5K.  Which is my airfare back to Latin America and 1 years health insurance!
The Andes in Ecuador


I think it is time to find that compass and set it in a new direction. I am currently looking at some very different options:
Andean School



  1. Working in an experimental school in the high Andean mountains of Ecuador, teaching English, Music Arts and Crafts.  The town is 120 miles south west of Quito the capital.  This for a year.   I fancy the high Andean mountains, the roof of the world (southern hemisphere) …….

  2. Possibly doing a similar things in the Ecuadorian Rain Forest with a “tribe”, this for 3 months.   This really is a non starter now ~ but later?

  3. Working in a project for displaced children in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.  3 – 6 months.  But it is in a city …..

Or anyone of many similar of projects with similar aims and objectives stretching from Mexico to Chile!
The Amazonian Tribe is for real!

And that isn't tea!
Part of my selection criteria is/well be ( in no particular order):


  1. Projects are on the basis of accommodation in return for voluntary work.  No more paying rent.
  2. Offering an opportunity to work with children for more than just a couple of hours a day.
  3. Being part of a very different community ~ more grass roots, more earth centred, more traditional
  4. Being somewhere where the opportunity to use English is limited. (Except when teaching)
  5. Limited communications ~ less reliance on the internet?
  6. A brave new world (for me).
  7. An established project, but not necessarily financially comfortable!

My thinking in part is that if I can work in return for accommodation, then I have a little more money to use either for “treats” or to use for the benefit of the host organisation. Buying the materials for classes etc. 

The Salasaca Indians of the Ecuadorean Andes

Salasacan EasterProcession!
Oh yes, I also plan to use my network in Latin America from my Chamber days and from my Eurochambres Academies to see if I might also do a little “informal” consultancy helping small rural businesses improve or find some project that may be a little more off the beaten track.

Now of course, a change of “tack” will involve some endings, but I am wondering whether new beginnings will outweigh the sweet sorrows of parting? (to completely misunderstand the Bard!)

I have to say I am pretty taken with the idea of living on the roof of the world! The Andean school is at 2709 m / 8891 ft and the "local" mountains rise to over 20,000 feet!

And it would simply be a matter of swapping Inca for Maya!


Important bit coming up >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 

What is your opinion?   
Please use the comment box below to send me back any thoughts 
or ideas or email me.

Thanks.




 Hasta Luego Amigos

Thursday 24 May 2012

Sleep, food, routine, bats and my project!


Sleep
My sleeping pattern seems to change with the weather.  I go to bed much earlier and I get up much earlier.  I am up and about before 5am these days and in bed just after 9!  The nights are chillier so an extra blanket on the bed (no duvets or any form of central heating here) and because we are tropical of course we get around 12 and half hours of daylight pretty much unchanged all year.  It is light by 6am and dark by 6.30pm, I like to be sitting in the garden with a cup of coffee as soon as it is light.   And although I live in the tropics I also live in the mountains, what we imagine as tropical weather is only experienced in the lowlands here I live at 1530 metres which is around 5000 feet.  Often I am living in the clouds!


Food
I was just looking at my larder and realised just how basic it is:

Dried Black beans
Dried Red Beans
Sugar
Tea
Coffee
Salt and Pepper
A few spices
Lots of cinnamon sticks
Rice
Tomato Paste
Pasta
Tin of Black Olives (treat!)
Carton of Milk
Butter
Eggs
A few onions, tomatoes and courgettes
Biscuits
Yoghurt, some stewed blackberries
Cream and cottage type cheese – mainly for use with the beans.

That’s it!
Children acting out a story from the Mayan "Popol Vuh"

Routine
I tend to go to the market Monday, Thursday and Saturday and buy what I need over and above the “staples” mentioned above.  Bread is bought fresh as needed (daily).
And have decide that meat is for the weekends only!

My menu for the last seven days has been:


Pasta with vegetables including courgettes from the garden   (3 meals)
Caldo de pollo (chicken soup/stew) (3 meals)
Frijoles negro (black beans) and rice (4 meals)
Frijoles rojo (red beans) and rice with a couple of fried eggs (3 breakfasts)
Yoghurt and blackberries (4 breakfasts)
Cheese/ham rolls (2 meals)
Gallons of Coffee!

Basic, healthy and cheap! And typical of any Guatemalan household!

This weekend I think I will have caldo de res (soup/stew of beef) which I will have with rice and broccoli a pound of stewing beef will be sufficient to make enough stew for 3 meals, I have black beans soaking already…..

Every Guatemalan household ALWAYS has beans of one colour or variety available and they will be eaten at least twice a day.

I don’t find the menu boring, even though I occasionally wish I had a nice piece of strong cheddar and a glass of port!

With the change of weather everything is extremely “lush” in the garden, sadly that includes the weeds and the grass which seem to grow at an alarming rate.  I decided to tidy up the entrance driveway and removed some 7 HUGE sacks of undergrowth and trailing weeds.   Some of these weeds were on stems 20 – 30 yards long!

"Batty" was only about 4 inches across, so bedraggled!
 This damp and dull weather has also brought out a whole new set of insects and after my gardening efforts I found that my legs had been bitten to pieces (despite my trousers being tucked into my socks): particularly unpleasant as the bites from whatever has bitten me have swollen and scabbed over and they itch like crazy!

I also had another couple of nights doing battle with flying ants which appeared from the roof, I have now cleaned the gap between the tops of the walls and the corrugated roof (inside) and hope that I am both winning the battle and will win the war on these pesky ants!  

Bats
I rescued a very bedraggled bat from a plastic bucket of water, the other day, the  poor things was desperately trying to get out but of course could get no purchase.  I donned my gardening gloves fetched him out and put him on a tree within 15 minutes he had dried out and was off!

Artes Móviles
Harsh reality of rural life
The last few early morning I have been cracking on with a website for Artes Móviles, at present it is being hosted on a free site so is plastered with adverts and is very much still in progress. Once it is in decent shape I will let you all know as I will welcome your comments.

Boy farmworker probably around 7 years old

Even at 6 she has two younger siblings to look after!
Artes Móviles will be an NGO project taking music, drama, arts and crafts to children in rural and remote parts of Guatemala.  Given the fact that Guatemala is mountainous and volcanic, becoming rural and remote does not necessarily imply great distances but usually means high altitudes and unmade roads!  Ten minutes drive from Antigua and it is all pretty rural and once you are off the main road, you are on to unmade dirt tracks pretty soon!  Guatemala is one of the poorest countries in all Latin America.

Sadly only 42% of children finish primary education here. Many children have only two or three year’s education and by 12 the girls are at home bringing up their siblings and the boys are working in the fields.  Sadly by 14 many girls will themselves be young mothers!

It is a factor of Guatemala's crushing poverty,that this happens, outside of the public gaze in the romote hillsides where there is little orno education and communities have never recovered from the 36 year long civil war which only finished in 1996. Itis the harshest of economic necessity that forces these children to abandon their childhood!

Childhood is brief and in many cases merely a preparation for taking on an adult role as soon as possible. Self expression forms no part of an education system where children mainly learn by rote copying down notes and receiving no 1-2-1 help support or encouragement.

A rural school.
Art, music and drama is simply absent, which in many cases also means that any connection with their own cultural Mayan heritage is lost.



The idea of Artes Móviles is simple.  Take an MPV stuff it full of arts based activities and go out and about and for a morning or an afternoon a week give a group of children the chance to paint, sing, play and express themselves in new and exciting ways.  They have the chance to achieve something with which they can be proud, often for the very first time!  Many organisations are devoted to general education, welfare and nutrition, but hardly any can afford the costs for providing what is seen as a luxury of exposure to the arts and all the wonders its holds.  Artes Móviles hopes to bridge and fill that gap for some 10,000 (yes, ten thousand) over the first three years of its operation.  It will provide eight, half-day, weekly sessions for groups of children, the first ten groups of children have already been identified, and during  the school holidays Artes Móviles will setup “shop” in rural, remote and/or mountain villages and simply open its doors to all comers!

At the moment I am in the process of setting up the strategy, I have to form an NGO here in Guatemala and will need to form a charity in the UK (as this is where I hope to attract the funds from), I hope to enlist the support of friends to get a viral/social marketing campaign off the ground.  Here I am hoping that the embassy will help with introductions to every UK company working in or associated with Guatemala……. I hope that Artes Móviles will launch by November of this year. And start delivering programmes from the start of the new Mayan Calendar (22nd December 2012).

Its ambitious, but I am taking a cautious approach and not moving forward unless I am sure of the financial and other support.  I will start small and grow. In the end the project will cost around £46k per annum but I can get the project started with around 33% of that. Watch this space!

Children of the mountain village of Todos Santos (All Saints)

Today I am off to Santiago Zamora and my 40 children...... we aregoing to make bracelets, with shiny plastic beads for the girls and wooden beads for the boys!

Hasta Luego Amigos

Wednesday 16 May 2012

All change!




Hello!

Well the weather seemed to change yesterday the "land of eternal spring" went from a non-existent summer (except that the last few days were very hot) to a humid morning followed by 5 hours of torrential rain!  My roof is made of corrugated laminate with some tiles laid on top (for effect) the noise is deafening but the roof is water tight.  Well watertight inside there are many leaks where the laminate meets the clear laminate covering the patio, and the gutters need cleaning!

Jossefet is now in Brussels for three months, a friend of his has kindly offered him an internship in his textile-design company, I hope it works out. So the burgeoning relationship is in a period of change and adjustment!  Unsurprisingly, to me, he was grilled for four hours by immigration at Madrid airport before being let into the EU. Missed his connection but was put on a later flight to Brussels. All this, despite of having a letter of invitation and various other details to prove he was a legitimate visitor.


As “penny buns had been costing tuppence” lately, I have decided to use the next three months to change my diet and live more like a “Chapin” (Guatemalteco) and adopt a traditional diet, (but)  also be meat free 4 days a week.  It will do me good, I need to loose a further 5-10 kg if my optimal BMI is to be believed and achieved! So more vegetables, more frijoles, more fruit.  Less cream cheese, cream and cakes. I have as good as stopped drinking alcohol except for the occasional beer (this is purely temporary I hasten to add!) and I probably drink too much coffee these days!

The project in Santiago Zamora is heading for the buffers as the old guy who founded the project really resents the popularity and diversity of what is being offered to the children, and is making life impossible for us, so we need a change of strategy.

For me, I have seen the writing on the wall, and have been preparing for this change over the last two months I have been working on the idea for a new project which is called “artes móviles” with the proposed mission of “bringing the arts to Guatemalan children in remote and rural communities and importantly for those children with special needs”.   

 I am developing the project plan and will be asking you all for your ideas, and support (at a later date) going to need to find 500 people willing to cough-up £5 per month for the duration of the project. Viral marketing and sponsorship by UK companies in Guatemala will be the way forward I hope. Looking for a late 2012 launch but have many obstacles to overcome in the meantime ~ gauging interest, forming an NGO in Guatemala, charity commission rules in the UK, to name but three!

Simply sitting, and watching the world go by just isn’t an option! However, I am constantly reminded of the frustration I felt in India with an approach to anything taking five times as long and achieving on 50% what I am used to in Europe!  Mañana,  mañana and looking “po faced” and not expressing any opinion to your face. Adapting to this culture change is so frustrating, my well meaning advisors all tell me to lower my expectations and then lower them some more!


But, part of the process of designing and delivering arts based activities to the children has been an incredible widening of my own skills and abilities.  In the last two months I have made terracotta hanging mobiles, learned to use a hot glue gun, designed picture frames in “foamy”,  and started out on a whole new world around jewellery making and design. The shops here are “chokka” with cheap jewellery; all the same, all boring and not a scintilla of creativity to be seen!  I want to use this medium for developing the creativity and ingenuity of the children, giving them an opportunity to change from the traditional learning by rote and copying based learning of school to the freedom to explore and develop ideas and give them expression through making amazing pieces of costume jewellery!  Traditional starting point, but with an original (Mayan) twist! The boys and girls will also have the challenge of finding ways of overcoming the technical details of trying to work with wire and stones and in design problem solving.

So today, I present the idea of “artes móviles” to the operational team of CasaSito and hopefully after getting their support, the idea goes to the board of CasaSito with the hope that it becomes a (future) autonomous but partner project of CasaSito. 

I have been so frustrated with the technology behind this blog, as I have no real idea whether you are getting to read my witterings as there is no way of knowing who when and how you read the blog after I press the “publish” button- so maybe I need to change this as well!

Oh yes, I have 6486 tracks on my computer in i-tunes  represented by over 400 composers I have turned on shuffle - so I am listening to the lot in a randon order- a complete change in my listening habits and an absolute revelation. So many gems I have simply forgotten!  Oh yes the 6486 tracks would take 23 days of continuous listening!  The juxtaposition of tracks is a little hair-raising at times but then so is life!

All change!

Last Thursday was Mother's day here in Guatemala ~ I got the children making cards for their Mums!





 Hasta Luego Amigos!


It has just started to thunder and rain.......  during the rainy season itraisn everyday in the afternoon  often torrentially ...... and I need to go out to do my presentation! Hey ho!

Saturday 5 May 2012

Brazil, Flying Chickens and Wooden Beads!


Well my whistle stop trip to Florianopolis and the Eurochambres Academy was enjoyable and worthwhile.  The hotel was on the beach in what is a very popular seaside resort in season. May is out of season. Empty beaches and the chance for some very gentle, relaxing strolls, managed an average of 5 kilometres per walk and did a walk on each of the 3 days I was there.  The course was well received and the delegates very enthusiastic, even if by the time they got to my session they had had some 4 days of lectures! I had the opportunity to do some thinking and generally think about things (see my more introspective blog).

Here is a selection of pictures from my walks .....
















The Academy was just at the right time for me as I was “out of visa”  after 180 days it is necessary to leave Guatemala for 3 days before you can re-enter – as I am only on a tourist visa at the current time.









Once back in Antigua, it was time to think about new projects for Santiago Zamora and more importantly for my Artes Moviles project.  My next posting will be about this project.

The weather continues to be crazy here and combined with the fact that travel even a short distance can result in very different weather I have had a cold since Wednesday. For instance on Thursday in Antigua 7 am  ~ chilly and damp, 10 am ~ hot sunshine, 1pm Santiago Zamora ~ warm but cloudy, 5pm Santiago Zamora ~ cold and misty, 6pm Antigua ~ cloudy and exceptionally humid, 10pm very humid ……   Antigua has its own micro-climate  as it is in a valley and Santiago Zamora is surrounded by the hills forming part of the slopes of Volcano Acatenango.  Net result a cold!


Some weeks ago Jossefet and I purchased a raft of materials for making garden mobiles- these terracotta figures need painting and assembling into mobiles – we were trying the idea out as a possible arts/crafts project. We had purchased these wonderful terracotta chickens and J spent a quite, some time painting them as he wanted each one to be slightly different. I have spent a couple of hours this morning painting stringing them and decorating the mobile structure.  So we now have the “Flying Gallinas”  pronounced ga-yee-nas ~ which to my mind sounds like a trapeze act in a circus!   But they look good.

PLastic beads but "Arty"

Project for the Girls

Set made by Jossefet  ~ first attempt!

Something more stylish from Jossefet!

Work in progress- classical from Michael
We have also been experimenting with making jewellery, originally as a project,  but our creativity has taken over and we are both producing some “pieces” Jossefet is using polished stones and I am sticking to using plastic and wooden beads, but we are both trying to produce costume jewellery that looks good and has its own style.  The plan is then to simplify the ideas to introduce this craft to the children. 

Using only wooden beads - as a start for the children.
Today I have made a series of necklaces and bracelets using only wooden or plastic beads, and arriving at a range of designs for both the boys and the girls.

I am hoping that this might kick start some “creativity”  in the children, their schooling is totally devoid of original thinking, and in art as soon as you say “drawn anything you want”  they all rush to get books in order to copy pictures!

I have been doing a few sessions with them on abstract art and it has been an uphill struggle to get them to even start to comprehend that there need not be any rules and that things do not have to be symmetrical, but slowly we will get there!
Haven’t got a clue what they will make of things when we do a session on portraits in the style of Picasso!

It looks like Jossefet is definitely off to Brussels for three months in the next week or two.  So I am glad that I have my “Artes Moviles” project to get stuck into.




The garden is currently getting regular visits from humming-birds and today a pair of Yellow Torgons …….. but the birds were actually much more of an amazing Orange colour, so wonderful to watch as they searched for insects in the Mandarin tree!   (Oh, yes it is rather nice to pick a Mandarin from one’s own tree!)





The introspective blog is posted along with this one …….  (it is NOT required reading) but I promised that my blog would reflect the various aspects of my thinking and it was important at the time- though I delayed posting it!

 Ok folks that's it for today!


Hasta Luego Amigos!